πŸ«‚ Social Inclusion#

This section brings together academic research focused on social inclusion, public policy, and mechanisms of social resilience.

The core focus is the reconceptualization of inclusion as a systemic category, extending beyond formal access to resources toward interaction structures, norms, and self-regulating social mechanisms.

πŸ”¬ Core Research Theme#

The central research direction is:
Rethinking inclusion in public policy:
developing an evaluation framework for large families as a factor of demographic and socio-economic resilience.

This includes:

  • analyzing the role of family structures in long-term societal stability
  • formalizing inclusion criteria in policy design
  • rethinking social indicators beyond income-based metrics
  • integrating demographic factors into policy frameworks

🧩 Extended Research Field#

In addition, the direction includes:

  • mechanisms of social self-regulation
  • formation of norms and identity boundaries
  • group dynamics (including peer adolescent groups)
  • social behavior under uncertainty
  • informal institutions and their role

🧭 Scientific Approach#

Core assumption:

Inclusion is a property of a system, not only a feature of access policies.

This implies:

  • social systems generate internal norms and balances
  • public policy must account for these dynamics
  • policy effectiveness depends on alignment with real social structures

πŸ“Š Methodology#

Research combines:

  • qualitative methods (interviews, observation, case studies)
  • policy and institutional analysis
  • conceptual modeling of social systems
  • interdisciplinary approaches (sociology, economics, behavioral science)

🌍 Perspective#

This direction enables:

  • development of new social policy models
  • redefinition of inclusion metrics
  • analysis of demographic resilience
  • integration into national and international policy frameworks